Dual-band mixer and its design flow
In the dual-band mixer of this invention, a current combined load is presented and is shared by two separate working frequency bands. In the invented dual-band mixer, a switch is provided to connect and disconnect an adjust capacitor series to the load inductors. By determining the capacitance of respective capacitors and the inductance of the load inductors, it is possible to generate resonance with related parasitic capacitances at particular frequencies, such that value of the load inductors may be changed. This enables the invented mixer to work with selected frequencies according to the operation of the switches. In addition, a systematic methodology is proposed to implement the design of the invented dual-band mixer. The efficient design method is approved by a 2.4/5.2-GHz CMOS mixer implementation.
The present invention relates to a dual-band mixer for use in wireless communications, especially to a mixer that is able to work with two separate bandwidths with reduced number of components and die size.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTIONDue to the wide application of the wireless communications nowadays, lower-cost and wider-bandwidth wireless communications devices have been a target of research and development in the industry. In order to satisfy the needs in the wireless applications, the industry has been driven to migrate to the 2-6 GHz frequency range. For wireless LAN applications, industrial standards target the carrier frequency to either the 5.2-GHz band, by the IEEE 802.11a standard, or the 2.4-GHz band, by the IEEE 802.11g standard. Dual-band transceivers are thus proposed by the industry to provide more flexible and convenient usages of the wireless LAN systems.
Among the dual-band transceivers as announced, most of them contain two different mixers in one transceiver chip. Under such a design, circuit of the transceiver chip is made even complicated and dimension of the chip would be made twice that of a single-band mixer, since all the circuit elements are duplicated. Among all the elements inductors at the load are the most space-consuming component, since 4 load inductors, 2 for each mixer, are required in the differential architecture of the circuit. This becomes a main obstacle in reducing the cost of dual-band applications.
In order to shrink the chip size, it is possible to merge two mixers into a single mixer. This may reduce number of inductors at load in the differential architecture from 4 to 2. However, the load of the mixer was designed to operate at only one specific frequency. As a result, such dual-band mixer can only be used in a dual-band receiver, not a dual-band transmitter. A load that can be shared by two bands was proposed by using a band pass filter with a notch at output to divide the pass band into two different bands. See S. Lavasani et al.: “Pseudo-concurrent 0.18/spl mu/m dual-band CMOS LNA,” Radio Frequency Integrated Circuits (RFIC) Symposium, pp. 8-10, June 2003. The circuit was simplified because 2 bands used shared elements. Unfortunately, under such a design an extra inductor was added to the load to introduce the notch. As a consequence, it still required 4 inductors at load to form a differential architecture.
It is thus necessary to provide a novel dual-band mixer wherein elements may be shared by two bands and no additional inductor will be needed.
It is also necessary to provide a dual-band mixer wherein working frequency bands may be easily selected.
OBJECTIVES OF THE INVENTIONThe objective of this invention is to provide a novel dual-band mixer.
Another objective of this invention is to provide a dual-band mixer wherein elements may be shared by two bands without the need of additional inductor.
Another objective of this invention is to provide a dual-band mixer wherein working frequency bands may be easily selected.
Another objective of this invention is to provide a low-cost and small-size dual-band mixer.
Another objective of this invention is to provide a method to implement the design of dual-band mixers.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONAccording to this invention, a dual-band mixer is disclosed. In the dual-band mixer of this invention, a current combined load is presented and is shared by two separate working frequency bands. In the invented dual-band mixer, a switch is provided to connect and disconnect an adjust capacitor series to the load inductors. By determining the capacitance of respective capacitors and the inductance of the load inductors, it is possible to generate resonance with related parasitic capacitances at particular frequencies, such that value of the load inductors may be changed. This enables the invented mixer to work with selected frequencies according to the operation of the switches. In addition, a systematic methodology is proposed to implement the design of the invented dual-band mixer. The efficient design method is approved by a 2.4/5.2-GHz CMOS mixer implementation.
These and other objectives and advantages of this invention may be clearly understood from the detailed description by referring to the following drawings.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
It is known that most radio frequency CMOS mixers are implemented using the popular Gilbert-type double balanced active mixer. In the following description, the dual-band mixer of this invention will be described using the Gilbert-type mixer as an example. It should be understood that the dual-band mixer of this invention may be applied in mixers of other architectures or designs.
Dual-Band Mixer
A dual-band mixer of the present invention will be described hereinafter.
Now refer to
2 Load inductors Lload, Lload function as load stage to increase voltage headroom and to minimize process variation for the purpose of integration. The 2 inductors Lload, Lload are recommended to have about the same inductance. Of course, it is possible to use 2 inductors with different inductances and number of inductors is not limited to 2. It is also possible to use 1 or more than 2 load inductors to function as load. The main capacitor C1 and the adjust capacitors C2 and C3 are used to perform current combination, so that differential output of the mixer may be converted into the single-ended form. Main capacitor C1 and 2 adjust capacitors C2, C3 may have about the same capacitance. Of course, this is not any limitation to this invention. To switch the working frequency band of the mixer, transistor 10 is used as switch to change the capacitance for current combination by connecting or disconnecting adjust capacitors C2, C3 in parallel with the main capacitor C1. In the embodiment of this invention, the switch may be a large-dimension PMOS transistor. It is understood that other types of transistors or switches may also be used in this invention to determine connection of adjust capacitors C2, C3 with main capacitor C1.
After having optimized the relation between linearity and gain of the mixer, form factors of the MOS transistors and parasitic capacitance at drain nodes of transistors M5, M8 at the switch stage may be fixed. The parasitic capacitance at the drain nodes of the switch stage is herein defined as Cp, which shall be in a range to enable the parasitic capacitance to resonate with load inductors Lload, Lload.
Working with the Higher Frequency Band
For a mixer as shown in
When operating at the higher frequency band f1, since the current combining capacitance required at this band is much smaller in value than that of the lower frequency band, switch 10 is turned off and the adjust capacitors C2 and C3 are disconnected from the load. The load inductance Lload can be represented by an equivalent circuit consisted of two inductors L1 and L2 in parallel as:
The equivalent circuit of load of the dual-band mixer when working at band f1 is shown in
Both Cp and L1 together act as short circuit when the mixer is operating at frequency band f1, if the following condition is met:
As shown in
Working with the Lower Frequency Band
On the other hand, while the mixer is set to the second operating frequency f2, the equivalent inductor pair L2 shall resonate with device parasitic Cp. Thus, Cp and L2 act jointly as a short circuit at frequency band f2, if the following condition is met:
Switch 10 is turned ON and adjust capacitors C2 and C3 are connected in parallel with main capacitor C1, to perform current combination at the lower frequency band f2. The simplified equivalent circuit of the load is shown in
The operation of current combiner at the lower frequency band is similar to the steps described in
The proposed mixer, therefore, can perform dual band operation by the same elements, especially the load. Only two load inductors are required in the proposed mixer to perform dual-band operation for a differential architecture. Compared to the conventional approach which has two mixers, one for each band, and totally four load inductors, two in each mixer, for a differential architecture, the number of load inductors of the proposed mixer is halved by sharing load elements at two bands. By simply setting the connection of the adjust capacitors, the load inductors can perform differential to single up-conversion and reduce parasitic effects at two different frequency bands.
Design Flow
Based on above design concepts, a design flow for dual band mixer is developed as shown in
In designing the invented dual-band mixer, parameters for the circuitry as shown in
At the higher frequency band f1, the adjust capacitors C2 and C3 are switched off and the main capacitor C1 solely performs current combination. The required combiner capacitance to resonate with equivalent inductor L2 is obtained by equation (4) at 506.
All capacitors C1, C2 and C3 concurrently perform current combination at the lower frequency band f2. The required capacitance for current combination at frequency band f2 is given by equation (6) at 507:
Herein, parameter k=f1/f2, is the ratio of the two operating frequencies.
By following above procedure, the design of the load including parasitic effects for dual-band mixer is expeditiously accomplished. All the parameters of the load are presented to be in relation with parasitic capacitance and operating frequencies. At 508 compare the results with available cell library, and modify the components if required. An automatic net list generating program can be used to generate a circuit with obtained components, which can be easily integrated with commercial EDA tools to perform circuit simulation, layout, design value check etc, and post-layout simulation. At 509 fine tuning for switch effect is completed to assure design performances.
EFFECTS OF THE INVENTION The proposed schematic design methodology is applied to 2.4/5.2-GHz CMOS dual-band mixer design. The dual-band mixer is designed to operate with a 1.8-V power supply by using 0.18 μm CMOS technology. Values of related parameters of the dual-band mixer are shown in Table I. The smallest feature size of the available capacitor library provided from the manufacturer, however, is 100 fF. The main capacitor size is thus modified to fit the cell library and the higher frequency band of the implemented mixer is therefore lowered. The measured return losses of the output port for operating at 5.2-GHz and 2.4-GHz are shown in
The output power is measured with a 10-MHz baseband signal. As shown in
As the present invention has been shown and described with reference to preferred embodiments thereof, those skilled in the art will recognize that the above and other changes may be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
Claims
1. A dual-band mixer comprising a differential radio frequency mixer architecture to mix received radio frequency signals with local oscillator signals, wherein output of said mixer is provided with: a load inductor set to perform as load; a main capacitor connected to said load inductor set to generate combined current so to convert differential output of said mixer into single end form; an adjust capacitor set connected in parallel with said main capacitor; and a switch to control connection of said adjust capacitor set and said main capacitor.
2. The dual-band mixer according to claim 1, further comprising a resistive degeneration circuit to suppress third-order distortion of said received radio frequency signals.
3. The dual-band mixer according to claim 1, wherein said load inductor set comprises two inductors with about the same inductance.
4. The dual-band mixer according to claim 1, wherein said adjust capacitor set comprises two capacitors with about the same capacitance.
5. The dual-band mixer according to claim 1, wherein said two capacitors of said adjust capacitor set have about the same capacitance of said main capacitor.
6. The dual-band mixer according to claim 1, wherein said switch is transistor.
7. A dual-band mixer comprising a differential radio frequency mixer architecture to mix received radio frequency signals with local oscillator signals, wherein output of said mixer is provided with: a load inductor set to perform as load; a main capacitor connected to said load inductor set to generate combined current so to convert differential output of said mixer into single end form; an adjust capacitor set connected in parallel with said main capacitor; and a switch to control connection of said adjust capacitor set and said main capacitor;
- wherein said load inductor set comprises two inductors with about the same inductance, with the inductances L1 and L2 of:
- 1 C p L 1 = 2 π f 1 and ( 2 ) 1 C p L 2 = 2 π f 2; ( 4 )
- wherein f1 represents a higher working frequency and f2 represents a lower working frequency, Cp represents parasite capacitance of said mixer;
- capacitance of said main capacitor C1 is:
- 1 2 C 1 L 1 = 2 π f 1; ( 3 )
- and said adjust capacitor set comprises two capacitors with about the capacitances C2 and C3 of:
- C 2 = C 3 = C p ( k 2 - 1 k 2 ) ( 6 )
- wherein k=f1/f2.
8. The dual-band mixer according to claim 7, further comprising a resistive degeneration circuit to suppress third-order distortion of said received radio frequency signals.
9. The dual-band mixer according to claim 7, wherein said switch is transistor.
10. A method to design a dual-band mixer, comprising the steps of:
- determining structure and form factors of said dual-band, including size of circuit and working frequencies f1 and f2, wherein f1 represents a higher working frequency and f2 represents a lower working frequency;
- wherein structure of said dual-band mixer a differential radio frequency mixer architecture to mix received radio frequency signals with local oscillator signals, wherein output of said mixer is provided with: a load inductor set comprising two inductors to perform as load; a main capacitor connected to said load inductor set to generate combined current so to convert differential output of said mixer into single end form; an adjust capacitor set comprising two capacitors and connected in parallel with said main capacitor; and a switch to control connection of said adjust capacitor set and said main capacitor;
- calculating parasite capacitance Cp of said mixer;
- calculating an equivalent inductor L1 to resonate with said parasite capacitance Cp under said higher working frequency f1 according to the following equation:
- 1 C p L 1 = 2 π f 1; ( 2 )
- calculating an equivalent inductor L1 to resonate with said parasite capacitance Cp under said higher working frequency f1 according to the following equation:
- 1 C p L 2 = 2 π f 2; ( 4 )
- calculating capacitance C1 of said main capacitor according to the following equation:
- 1 2 C 1 L 1 = 2 π f 1; ( 3 )
- calculating capacitances C2 and C3 of said two capacitors of said adjust capacitor set according to the following equation:
- C 2 = C 3 = C p ( k 2 - 1 k 2 ); ( 6 )
- wherein k=f1/f2; and
- applying said L1 and L2 values to said two inductors of said load inductor set.
11. The method according to claim 10, further comprising the steps of checking circuit of design so obtained and modifying said circuit design.
Type: Application
Filed: Oct 14, 2005
Publication Date: Apr 19, 2007
Patent Grant number: 7415257
Applicant: Kuei-Ann Wen (HsinChu)
Inventors: Mei-Fen Chou (HsinChu), Kuei-Ann Wen (HsinChu), Chun-Yen Chang (HsinChu)
Application Number: 11/249,476
International Classification: H04B 1/04 (20060101);